'4 THE SCRANTON TMBUjSJB-WEDNESDAY, JUKE 21, 1890. (Sc kvcbtvi vtrtBune riihllilma Hilly, Itxuept Smirtir. br th TrlbunnriibllaMn; Company, at Fifty Cant u Mori lb. Jmw inrkUfflco: h0 Nttmut U H. S. VKKIXA.VI to!e Atjant for Mralen Advertising. imkrkd at the rovrorrtcr. at smANTOS, !., AS8r.COND-Ct.AS1 MAlt. M ATTKII. SCKANTON, JUNH 21, 1899. now fou s'rniDKT r.Ki'.vms. The men who have fn tight asphalt repairs are not tlie men who make much hfo ot tin? stit-cts of Scranton. Their defeat Is a substantial victory for good eovotnmcnt. Quour Reformers. 'J'lio e.ierlmnt of Sunday Journal ism haw been abandoned by the London dally papers which recently Ftartotl It, the protests being loo numerous and strong. There aie still Sunday papers in London hut they are of the slcip-hucket order. The net result of the orRanlrcil opposition of rc llKlous Inlluenees to Sunday jour nalism In the Uritlsh metropolis has been the scaring of the Intelligent nnd respectable publishers out of the field and the complete sur render of It to the peddlers of froth and filth. The Sabbatarian movement In Us op position to Sunday publications has worked similarly In this country- It Is aimed chiefly at decent papers. The Fewer sheets like the crantonlan are given an uninterrupted swath In which to disseminate thflr shocking pollution and pander to the public's growing appetite for scandal. Just how far this constitutes a gain for civilization and morals we have never been able to discover, but that may be owing to a defect In our own powers of perception. A time may come when the decent people of the community will take ade quate steps to protect themselves from the nefarious activities of the gutter tnlpe type of Sunday journalism and abate it as they would nhate a deadly plague; but it does not seem to be very near. The attitude of too many good people Is like that of the London Sabbatarians who revolted at the clean Sunday papers and left the Fewer sheets to stink to the full limit of their malodorous possibilities. General Miles affirms that the situa tion In the Philippines Is serious. The geneial will get a court martial If he Isn't careful. Uitlandcrs Vs Boors. A succinct statement of the griev ances of the Uitlandcrs In the Trans vaal has been given by the London cor respondent of the New York Times, who says thev are four-fifths of the population and pay nine-tenths of the taxes. "They have," he adds, "eon verted a bankrupt, pastoral community into one of the richest areas In the world. Vet they have no share in levy ing or spending the oppressive taxes they pay; they have no control over the payment of officials; they have no voice in educational grants; their children above the third standard can only be educated In the degrading Iloer patois, which Is unintelligible, even in Holland; they have no voice In the municipal government of Johaqnesbutg, which they built; their press Is gagged; pub lic meetings are prohibited, nnd they have no right to a trial by their peers. For dynamite, a necessity for mining purposes, they have to pay exactly twice the market value, the difference going Into certain favored pockets." The answer of the Boers is that In asmuch as the Uitlanders were not asked to come Into the JJoer republic, but did so of their own volition, In pur suit of riches or employment, they Rhould accept the existing lawsand cus toms and not try to rhnnge them. Thl3 answer Is in direct conflict with our own Declaration of Independence, which affirms that whenever a government becomes destructive of life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness it is 'the right of the people to alter or abolish It and to Institute a now government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing Its powers In such fotm as to thorn shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. The Dec laration further affirms that while revolutions should not be lightly enter ed upon, yet "when a long train of abuses and usurpations evinces a de sign to reduie them under absolute despotism, It If their right, It Is their duty, to throw off such government and to provide new guards for their fu ture security." The train of Hoer abuses and usurpations In the Trans vaal Is both long and galling and every effort to secure an amelioration of It by peaceful nnd respectful means has ended disastrously, with exhibitions by tha Boers of Insolence and petty meanness Intolerable to men of spirit. In interpreting the news from Jo hannesburg during the next few months, the American people should bear In mind the sentiments of their own Declaration of' Independence and remember also that tho Ultlandor ma jority In tho Transvaal has the samo blood In Its veins that our Revolution ary forefathers hart when they derided to stand no further tyranny from an earlier Dutch dynasty. The sympathy hitherto given in American public opinion to "Oonj Paul" Kruger and the Hoers has been Ignorantly misplaced and It Is time to rectify ho error and give sympathy where It Is due. The navy department's outgivings on the Hodson-Schley affair put Schley In the light of having entrapped n brother ollieer Into making an apparently sweeping denial when In fact he denied fillip simply the particular wording of tho Now York Sun's report of the colloquy cm board the Hrooklyn, while atTlrmlng Its substantial accuracy. Schley now Ftandu convicted not only of a ques tionable nnval mnnoouver but also of a campaign ttlck of a character Impossi ble to a man of sensitive honor. Tho conclusion seems to bo warranted, al though It Is drawn with regret, that there Is u good deal ot the cheap John faker about Wlnlleld Scott Schley. In calling the. rtole convention for August 1M State Chairman Elklns has chosen n rathet BUltry period In the calendar. The Peace Congress. The reported inability of the peace congress to agree on any eubstnntlul propositions looking to the minimiza tion of war nnd the amelioration of Its horrors does not come ns a surprise to any observer who has looked upon Its deliberations with an unbiased eye. Tho principle ot arbitration Is n beautiful one and tho dream of universal pt.ico has pleased the fancy of mankind slnco history dawned; but when we get into this realm of realities we find the devil n very active and substantial factor to be reckoned with, nnd so long as he Is unchained them will be wars and the rumors of wars, among nations ns well as nmong Individuals wars of force as well as wars of cunning, bloody wnrs, meant to work destruc tion and characterized by all the car nage and no doubt an unpleasantly large proportion of the attocltles ot tho wars of 'the past. For human nature m mnlns unchanged from age to age nnd only In our ideals do wo grow better. It does not follow from this that the peaie congress lias been In vain. The congress may not result In tangible good In the directions immediately pur sued but there Is u gain to civilization which Is by no means inconsiderable in the mere coining together of repre sentatives of tho nations for a humano purpose. Such a concert of effort, al though directly fruitless, Is fruitful In directly in tho Information which it spreads, In the Intellectual and moral energies which It calls Into focus upon practical problems nnd In tho demon stration which It gives of the mutuality of larger Intet national interests nnd the superiority of frank diplomacy over passion as a means of adjusting differences. Tho congress which Is fol lowed by such indirect consequences as these Is" of historic significance even though In the Immediate purposes of Its assemblage It does not achieve a tangible success. There Is one consolation about the numerous strikes now reported throughout the country. Strikes rarely occur on a falling market. They are In a certain sense sure evidence that business has begun to revive. Tho Possibilities of Agriculture. Prince Kropotkln has issued recently an Intensely interesting volume, a large part of w hlch he devotes to agricultural economics, a subject which has re ceived little or no attention from the dootrlnalres who make a special study of other departments of orthodox politi cal economy. He calls his book "Fields, Factories and "Workshops." One might assume from tho peculiar political opinions of Prince Kropotkln that he would have run Into socialistic, If not anarchistic, extremes In propounding the philosophy of such questions. ThU Is not the case. Ho Is honest In col lating his facts, and rational and con servative In his conclusions. He ad duces innumerable statistics to sustain each argument ho sets forth, nnd these are drawn from tho writings nnd ex perience of practical agriculturalists In all countries In the world. What wo are concerned with hero Is not the sociological features of his schemes, but with that vast amount of practical Information which he has col lected on what Is known as "Intense agriculture." Experts mean by "In tense agriculture" the cultivation of tho land as it Is carried out In "truck gardens," bringing similar operations to bear on early potatoes, onions, cab bages and leguminous and cereal crops as tho scientific gardener does on such horticultural produce as grapes and vines. In a country like this the In troduction of such a system Is not pressing. Nevertheless, tho United States has Immensely developed it. It has been a favoilte theme with writers on political economy in Great Britain to contend that 'that country Is In capable of growing on its own soil suf ficient foodstuffs to support its popu lation of thirty millions; that England Is purely a manufacturing country, and that In the nature of things she can not be anything else. They havo main tained, moreoer, that this Is her true economical policy, and a cheap one In tho end. Kropotkln endeavors to show that this cannot remain long a possi bility for England. The marvellous ex pansion in manufacturing Industries In recent years Is not confined to Ger many and tho United States. Indus, trial expansion has claimed the wide world for Its sphere, except China, and the Industrial renaissance of ithe Celes tial empire is at hand. The conclusion our author arrives at is "that the pres ent tendency ot economical develop ment In tho world Is to induce more and more every nation, or rather every re gion, taken In Us geographical sense, to idy chiefly upon a homo production of all the necessaries of life. Not to reduce, I mean, the world exchange It may still grow in bulk; but to limit It to the exchange of what really must be exchanged, and at the same time Immensely Increase the exchange of novelties, produces of local or national art, n&w discoveries nnd Inventions, knowledge and Ideas." In other words, Prince Kropotkln believes that small local Industries combined with agricul ture will supercede tho mammoth manufactories of the present day; that decentralization will Inevitnbly follow the Intolerable Industrial centralization of our own time. Tho day when the farm laborer shall unbend bin back and stand upon his legs like a human be ing; when the city artisan rhall learn to know and appreciate nature may come, ns Kropotkln predicts. Hut that time seems remote. When Kropotkln comes to hard, prac tical facts ho Is too much of u man of science not to deal with them In a Hcientlllc manner. Thoro Is itill room enough In tho world to grow the food upon which the children of men may subsist, it it Is only milllclcntly culti vated. The huge prairie farms of the West are features of tho past. They produced immctuo crops owing to their Immense area. But tho Inflow of popu lation lms niude this Impossible much longer, nnd so much the better for all." Prodigious fertility le a chimera. Plant life l.s a physiological and not a chemical phenomenon. Tho plant re quires moistute, hoot nnd organic mi tilllon because these ure necessary to tho existence ot the microbes which are necessary to its existence. Tho mi crobes disintegrate the plant fond, Just as microbes In our own bystetn nro a necessity of our organic roconstltu tlon In the process of tissue waste. It has been demonstrated at nn experi mental station that with a quantity of loam (sawdust) and the requisite heat nnd moisture, a crop of onions or tomatoes can be raised on an asphalted pavement. Wo nro only at tho begin ning ot a stuponduous era In .sclentllla ngricultute. "While tho people of Lon don continue to pay," he says, "four pence (eight cents) for a lettuce Im ported from Paris, they have In Bos ton nnd Chicago immense greenhouses wheie gniden vegetables are propagat ed all the year round by means of electric light.' Such nre some of tho possibilities ot the agriculture of the future. The premonitions of Mulllius that the pos slblllties of cultivation could only reach a certain point nre belled by malized facts In France, Belgium, the Channel lflttuls and the Unil'-d States. A dense in ban population and the depletion of jural districts arc tho results of a high development of Industry. Hural England has practically been depopu lated, and the same process Is going on In Germany and tho United Stnies. But the time may come when the pro cess will stop, when there shall bo no more world-wide markets; when the Chinaman and the Hindoo shall manu facture, nay export, their own Indus trial arts; when the poor negro races of tropical Africa are exterminated and a reversion from a highly artific ial to a natural and normal stage of tho world's existence may supervene. It Is false economy to spare numbers In war. If SO.fiOO soldiers are not enohgh In the Philippines, double or treble that many should be used. The flower of oil,' regular army is there and while the regulars are generally willing to flght 20 out of the 24 hours In each day as long as human nature will hold out, even regulais havo lim its to their powers of endurance and should bo sulllclently re-lnforced to permit of adequate rest and recupera tion between fights. Tho way our legu lars were used at Santiago is not the way that they can be used indefinitely without giving out. o Hudyard Kipling has sued the pro prietors of "Tho Philistine" for pub lishing some of his poems without first obtaining his consent. An exchange hints that but for tho fact that Mr. Kipling has been so well advertised by Infringement of copyright laws, his productions would not command one fourth tho rates that ho Is now receiv ing. This Is undoubtedly true. Let the press at large Ignore Kipling and Ills efforts and he would drop out of sight quicker than Edward Atkinson has. As wo read of the movements of tho American and Filipino forces In tho press reports of engagements about Manila, the map of the Philippines be comes more tnngled in the mind of the average reader than ever. Until tho Czar of Russia stops quar reling with his mother he cannot expect to cut much of a figure in the interest of universal peace. Germany's acquisition of Spain's remnant Islands was a bargain sale in which Spain bceins to have got tho fat end. Question Is One of Dirty, Nof Politics From tho Interview with Attorney Gen eral Griggs. 6 S cjP 1IE VNITED STATES II stands bound to all other countries as the responsible U sovereign of the Philippine islands. It cannot, consistently with its international obligations or Its own self-respect, assume any Hher attitude. Its title to the Islands nnd to the sovereignty thereof. Is regular, valid and unimpeachable. To attempt to shift International responsibilities to any Ill-formed or partially formed In surgent government would be to shirk a responsibility holely assumed by this country and would subject tho United States not only to ridicule, but to the just contempt of all nations. o "Tho theory that there can exist In any indefinite body of people tho right to substitute their own will or nelf constituted form of government for tho regulnr constituted sovereignty of any particular territory, Is contrary to rea son and to all International practice. Tho rightful sovereignty of those is lands at the present time Is indis putably in the United States Any In surrection against its authority In the Islands is unlawful Just as unlawful ns though It arose in Porto UIco and the United States is Justified in putting It down by force. The sovereignty of i Spain was never transferred In any I manner which any other nation lias recognized as valid to the Insurgents, ! but was by tho treaty of Paris trans I ferred to the United States by solemn ' convention, which convention was ratl I fled by tho Senate of tho United States and that transfer la universally recog nized by all tho notions of the world. "There Is one consideration respecting tho United States and the Philippine Islands that ought to be already un derstood by those who approve or those who disapprove tho administration's ! course. That Is the question ot sover eignty, as that term is used and under stood In tho technical and international cense. Tho sovereignty of a country or territory cannot rest in more than one nation or body. It cannot, ait tho same time, rest in Spain and m the Insurgent forces claiming to mui.italn a govern ment In the same territory. It Is ad mitted that In thla International senso Spain has for more than S00 yenrs ex ercised all the rights and powers of a sovereign over tho H'hlllpplne Islands. Spain was responsible not only for the Internal control and government of tho Islands, but likewise was responsible to tho other nations ot tho earth for all mnttera of an international character relating to those islands or to their people. o "This docs not Imply, however, that the future policy of the United States towurd thoso Islands Is fixed. Whatever tho United States shall hereafter do by way of granting to tho people either in dependence or local self-government will be a matter of discretion nnd ex pediency. Those who criticise or oppose the administration In Us efforts to maintain tho authority of tho United States in the Philippines might just ns well oppose Its efforts to maintain law nnd otder In Porto Itlco or Alnska, ot to put down Insurrection occurring within those territories. Tho question Is not one of party politics, but simply of national dutv, and ought to bo ap proached and considered by our citiz ens from their sense of duty to this countrv." COMPLIMENT TO SCRANTON. Prom the Philadelphia inquirer. The piople of Scranton await only tho olllclul figures of the next decennial spii sus befoie taking Instant steps to change their form of government from that of a third-class city to thut of u second class, like Pittsburg nnd Allegheny. Al though that city had u population of onl sew nty-llvd thousand nine yenrs iign, lnr'ul lnciiliy has glwn bhth to tho conviction tint more than olio hundred thousand souls are now contained within its limits, mid it is even claimed by the inure enthuslubtlo icsidents that the next census will show almost one bundled and twenty-five' thousand. It Is probable tlmt the latter estimate Is a trllle high, but It Is certain that the city has grown with n inpldUy tnrcly witnessed In a l'ennsj lvnnlii town, utul the boast. Indeed, !s mado that few cities uf the booming West have exceeded the recent growth of tho so-called Electilc City. The de parture will not be mndo without buiuo opposition, but tbeic Is little leason to doubt tlint tho progressive spirit which has dominated the Seruntdn people will mercomo those who might object to the ladlcal changes which tho advancement will crtail. o Accepting, then, tho theory that tho progress of Scranton hns been remark able, nn Inquiry Into tho causes which brought about that result becomes logic al and Interesting. Such an inquiry. In deed, will be found of considerable valtio to other Pennsylvania towns that are now working out tho problem of munici pal and Industrial Improvement. Tho natural advantages of tho place were ob vious. Coal was there In abundance and the hope of carrying that product in duced five or six railroads to extend their lines to the city or its borders. Labor naturally followed. There is a surplus of It now, but nt some time during tho de velopment of the region many hands were needed and were found. Tho cheap ness of fuel was the potent reason for tho establishing of some Industries in and about the old city, nt,d tho success of these naturally brought others. But over and abovo these causes, for other cities had ns many natural advantages, was tho enterprise of tho leading men of tho town In all matters pertaining to Its de velopment. Tho first of tho anthracite people to realize that tho community that relies exclusively upon one Industry Is handicapped In the race for wealth, they were tho first to set systematically to work to secure others and to adhere to that system throughout the varying years. o The result Is known to the rest of tho state through tho position which Scran ton has assumed In the business world. With few exceptions tho capitalists of the town Invested such money as they could in mills nnd factories of various kinds, cheerfully nnd promptly meeting all Investors who enmo with legitimate proposals. Each of those mills and fac tories became In turn consumers of tho staple product, thus creating additional work for tho mines whllo giving employ ment to their own men. Then came the Scranton Board of Trade, as energetic and entei prising a body of Its kind as the country probably ever saw, and slnco that time tho advance has been constant. Scranton Is no longer a mining town. It Is nn Industrial city, with about all that the word Implies, and tho work of adding still more Industries to Its already largo number goes as bravely on n3 be fore. o Tho policy thero adopted is worthy of tho emulation of other towns desiring to attain municipal greatness. It Is not true that nil of thorn can do a3 well as Scranton has done, but It is trim that they all can try nnd that they will loso nothing by the trying. SOME HEROES OF PEACE. From Harper's Bazar. It is with making a hero as it is with making a cup of tea; tho water has first got to come to a boll. The Job cannot bo dono with cold materials, be they ever so proper. At almost every hero-making sonio ono gets hurt. Often It is tho hero himself; nnd if the hurt la severe enough tho Job is spoiled, except for literary and moral purposes. But very often tho hero gets off all right, and tho other fellows get hurt. Sometimes yes, often the hero shows his quality In saving life. That happens constantly at fires, bo that It Is a very common thing to read in the newspapers about the heroism of fire men, and especially about small, muscu lar firemen, who fetch exceedingly heavy women out of burning buildings and carry them down long ladders. No fire man minds being a hero, for he has plenty of company nnd is not bothered by overmuch admiration. Indeed, In ev ery calling where tho supply ot danger Is ndequato heroes seem to abound. The New York tiro department is full of he rocs, tried and accredited, and it Is so with the flro departments of other large cities. Policemen of high courage turn up whenever nn occasion offers, und oc casions nro not infrequent. Locomotive engineers are brave men, ns a rule, very apt to tuin out heroes at u pinch, and to bo bulled two or three days later. Ship masters usually meet expectations in a crisis, so that It Is considered ery scan dalous when they do not. Wo are bo used to heroism in till the ordinary call ings that, though wo admlie li when H turns up, wo are not unduly agitated by It. Heroism In war stirs our enthusiasm inoro thoioughly because wo are less used to It, und wo are less used to it. because wars arc comparatively Bcarce, and the opportunltcs for American fight ing men to make manifest their disposi tions nro rare. HIS ART. He cannot handle figures, Ho cannot shovel coal, Ho cannot wrlto in number That stir tho reader's soul. Ho cannot run an engine, Ho cannot wield a saw; Ho hns no .. Ift for preaching Or laying down tho law. He cannot paint a picture, lie's nut uu nn llltee'l, Nor Is ho u detective Whoso feito is to detect; In truth, ho's not a sculptor, I la never sculped a stroke. He couldn't drlvo an ox team Nor fasten on a yoke. He's not a lion tamer. Ho cannot trim a sail; Ho'u not u politician, Ho never broke a Jail, He never earned a dollar. His father pays his debts, But oh, he Is a master At rolling cigarettes. -S. 13. laser, in Tlmes-Herald. The Another flighty Blow Mas Been Struck at Our REBUILDING SALE. At EC 500 tloz. ot ladies' and men's pure linen collars, all the new est and latest spring styles, that are actually worth 12 J4c and 1 8c, to go at sc. At 119c All the window shades at one price. Come and pick out the fine ones. 308 Lackawamiinia Aveemie REXFORD'S. Scranton, June 21. One Dollar. ust now it buys a real Paul E. Wirt Fountain Pen with 14k. solid gold point. Paul Wirt makes as good foun tain pens as are made maybe a trifle better than others. At any rate they never disappoint. Ever stop to think what a con venience a good fountain pen is the privacy it secures you at hotels the hundred and one uses to which it can be put when traveling and at home ? Every one warranted. One dol lar. THE RliXFORD CO., 132 Wyoming Ave. Z Zh ,-r-. - lyz- k!s The Deadly Sewer Gas from a lenky drain may give tho doctor a caso of typhoid fever to work with un less you permit the plumber to get in his work on the drain first. Do not hcslt.ito about having tho plumb ing In your house examined by un expert If you think there Is the slightest defect. A thorough overhauling now will bavo many a dollar later. Tho fmoko test will convince you whether thero Is sewer gas or not. 323-327 PENN AVENUE. Lonther Keller LiriE, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, Etc. Yard and Ofllco West Lackawanna Ave., SCRANTON, PA. A faithful ami competent housemaid Ifipans , 'C : f d$mh& BJiniTIi rKm Hill ' ' " 'or more than two.j'ears I never knew wlut It was to be well. I had al. most constantly .1 dull nradache over my eyes. 1 frit so Uadly rot of the time that I found it ery diffnult to do my work as I Jiould. I bt.tne discouraged and almost broken douii. Onr day the lady for whom 1 work (jane me u few Kipans Tabiiles and told me to try them, f had '.pent nearly all my savings for months in doctotinj, but as the Tabules were given rr.e 1 thought I might try them. I used about a iWzen and the result was 1 fjlt like another oiiidn, and am no almost entirety free of my trouble with my stomach. The headache is all none. Hut I1 always keep the Tabules on hand and take one now and then as I feel I need it.. They have truly worked wonders for me." Fashion, at Prices and Values m At llgc Pair Ladies' Lisle Hose, in uiacK oniy, or mi 2 pairs g, At 39c Bleached table linen extra wide, latest patterns, formerly SJV sold at 69c yard. Mil Star AnatomatSc Paper Fasteeer Fastens papers iu a jiffy, feeds itself aud improved iu every respect. Prices lower tliau ever. We are still sell ing the Platiitary Pencil Sharpeners. The only sharp ening device which never breaks the lead. On trial in your office for 10 days free of charge. We have numerous other novelties in office sup plies, together with a large line of Blank Books and Typewriter's Supplies. leyeoldsBros STATIONERS and EXGRAVEKS. Hotel Jermyn Building. A Tvefflfy-Year Gold-Filled fee 15-Jeweld Walton Movement, Both Gmiaraeteed The Best Watch in the Whole World for the Money. ME1RCEMAU k COMELL 150 Wyoming Avenue. book NEAT, DUItADLU BOOK DINDIN'Q IS WHAT YOU RECEIVE IP YOU LEAVE YOUH OltUEK WITH THE TRIBUNE BINDERY. relate the following experience with j I Tubules FOR $10 FINLEY One Week Devoted to At Reduced Prices: In order to get our stock of Colored Shirt Waists down to normal propor tions, we have made a general reduction of from 15 to 25 percent, all along the line and our entire stock is now at your dis posal at tempting prices. The new prices apply on all CamMc, Seeicli anal Ereacl Giiglams, (Med Gmgliams aid Colored Pipe Waists, And we venture to say that no more attractive line is shown this season. The following numbers you will find exceptional value: I'ercalo Waists Reduced to 43c, 65c, 75c. and $1.00 Vnluo for 65c, 85c, 90c and $1.2? Gingham Waists $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75 Valuo for $3.50, $1.85 and $2.00 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE THE MODEUN HARDWARE STORE. This Week We arc giving with every purchase amounting to $5.00 or over, a PLYMOUTH These handsome aud use ful articles can now be seen in our window. F00TE k SMEAR CO, 119 Washington Ave. 119 The Hiimt & Comedll Co Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Jiardware. iU lactoaima Aveane HENRY BEL1N, JR., oeuvrai Auent ur tun Wyuuua Diairioiu." fining, illKHiua, Hportln?, iSiuoks.dil uuu luu lU'p.umo Uuouucal Company' s?UMr tiXJU kiiloly Kikp, Cnp mid Knlnjiiri. ttuoiu lul Coiirielt Uuititin;. boruuto J. AUENUlfcii THOH. FOUD, - Plttfdon. JOHN H. SMITH & SON, - Plymouth. W. 11 MULUUAN, - Wilkui.Barrc, ST o . hrt Waist ' ST1T1 o Sa TlTrTl (Pi? UMIJffll DUPOITO POWDER.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers